Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009 at 10:14 am  |  212 responses

Heavy is the Crown for King James

We’re all witnesses… to the first chink in the King’s armor.

by Adam Sweeney

For the past year, things have been golden for LeBron James. But after the Cleveland Cavaliers’ unceremonious departure from the NBA Playoffs was followed by James walking out without congratulating the opposing Orlando Magic, speaking to the media  or staying to talk to his teammates, it appears that for the first time in his NBA career a bit of the shine has worn off the King’s crown.

The moment would normally be dismissed if not for the fact that James is widely known as one of the most accessible and down to Earth players in the game. In his defeat weLeBron James weren’t witnesses to any of that. We were instead treated to a rare instance in which James was human.

“It’s hard for me to congratulate somebody after you just lose to them. I’m a winner. It’s not being a poor sport or anything like that. If somebody beats you up, you’re not going to congratulate them. That doesn’t make sense to me. I’m a competitor. That’s what I do. It doesn’t make sense for me to go over and shake somebody’s hand.”

That was how James inexplicably tried to justify his bad attitude to the media the day after the Game 6 loss when a simple, “I was disappointed in losing. I should have congratulated the Magic and my teammates for a great season. Even Nike LeBron puppet knows that,” would have gone a long way toward saving face. And wearing an all-white Yankees hat while he did it? Very nice touch. But at least he sent Dwight Howard a congratulatory email, because that makes everything better. Doesn’t he know Superman is a Twitter fan?

James may be on his way to claiming the title of best player since His Airness, but he has a lot to learn when it comes to the unwritten rules of the game, namely that you always congratulate your opponent whether you win or lose. They teach you that at YMCA camps. In one fell swoop, LeBron gave an excuse for other ballers to punk out after a game. Somewhere a high school player that can jump out of the gym is saying, “If The Chosen One won’t give a hand pound, why should I?” And don’t come at me with the Charles Barkley “Athletes aren’t role models” arguments. When you watch the Denver Nuggets play and look in the seats to see children with fauxhawks and imitation tattoos on their arms in honor of Chris Andersen, the look and attitude of these players absolutLeBron Jamesely has influence on those that admire them.

That’s something James forgot this weekend. He represents more than just himself. Everything is being set in place for LeBron to be the face of this franchise and the NBA. That face can’t only appear when the Sun is out. Anybody can do campy choreographed stunts with teammates when you’re running through the League in the regular season, but how you respond in the face of adversity is when you truly show your character. The future $1 billion face of the Association can’t afford to use up his social currency with fans or teammates. Don’t be surprised if David Stern politely reminds him of this with a phone call.

And they won’t admit it, but there is no doubt that James’ act of silence hurt his teammates. Of course they won’t crack on the man who almost carried them to the NBA Finals. It’s understood that you don’t bite the hand that feeds you the rock. But you win and lose as a team, and not staying after the Game 6 loss only added to the pain that the team was feeling after such a stunning defeat. It also may have tainted the chemistry that was built in a season that is to be remembered, all things considered. If you are claiming to be the franchise player and team leader, you do not turn your back and let Boobie Gibson have to take the podium to answer questions about the end of your team’s season. Yes there are some people that will say, “Well his teammates should be under the magnifying glass. They’re the cats who let him down in the biggest series of the season, not vice versa.” It doesn’t work that way. If Kobe loses in the NBA Finals, he can’t put his headphones on, pat Adam Morrison on the back and say, “You step up and field these questions, Big Moustache.”

To top it all off, the Orlando Magic deserved better for their accomplishment. They exposed the Cavs for what they were and showed the world they were the superior team. Kobe did the same thing to the Denver Nuggets and Carmelo Anthony, who has been ripped before for his lack of leadership, shined by sharing congratulatory words and a hug with Bryant after the game. Even if Anthony never wins a ring, he showed how a true winner behaves in defeat.

Maybe LeBron should go watch some ESPN Instant Classic videos of the games between the Detroit Pistons and L.A. Lakers. Isiah Thomas and Magic Johnson always made sure to keep it cool with each other, even if they probably wanted to kill one another when the ball was in the air. On second thought, maybe we don’t need to go as far as those two did in pre-game salutes. Kisses aren’t necessary, but LeBron could have at least given the Magic players a handshake for their worthy accomplishment.

Isiah’s actually seen both ends of the sportsman’s spectrum and could tell you that it’s a bad idea to walk away without congratulating the victor. He learned that the hard wayLeBron James after pulling the “I’m taking my ball and going home” move when the Chicago Bulls swept Detroit in the Eastern Conference Finals. It should go without saying it but I will anyway. LeBron, you do not want your name in the same sentence as Zeke.

James can’t be so naive to act like he’s above the rules of sportsmanship. No great player before him has gone their career without a heartbreaking defeat. Jordan had them against the Pistons and Celtics. Kobe did as well against the same organizations in the NBA Finals and both players had enough respect for others to swallow their pride and accept their defeat with class. If hockey players can shake hands after literally throwing down their gloves and pounding each other in a game, you can be cool enough to be a good sport on the hardwood.

Don’t get the misconception that I’m asking for James to step down from his throne. All he needs to do is like Kanye said, occasionally bow in the presence of greatness, which is exactly what anyone on Orlando would have done if they had lost to Cleveland. There’s hardly anything to dislike about LeBron James. He loves and respects the history of the NBA. His game will carry him to the Hall of Fame and he will have plenty of banners to hang in the rafters, whether it’s in Cleveland or New York. In his play and through his charity work, he has proven to be as selfless a person as there is in the game. But he’s no Superman. The caped one will be playing in the NBA Finals Thursday against L.A. That isn’t what matters though. What does is that no matter how he tries to spin it, LeBron will never truly be a winner until he learns how to lose.

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  • http://www.slamonline.com wayno

    Pretty sure Myles Just pwn’d Eboy VERY badly…

  • http://www.shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com Eboy

    I’m just playing along AR, you know, ’cause it’s all fun and games when the cool guys are the ones throwing insults.

  • http://www.shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com Eboy

    wayno, I’m pretty sure that type of thing never would bother a person like me. Which of course, it didn’t. And anyone that speaks using pwn’d in their everyday dialect usually has no place in an adult debate. Just saying.

  • namik

    It’s sad that the formerly intelligent posters on this site have been reduced to the usual squabbling idiots that can be found on any basketball forum everywhere. Even the reasons given in their defense are the same -(paraphrase)”I’m tired of the fawning over LeBron/Kobe”(paraphrase). LeBron f*cked up and yes since he has been presented as the Anti-Kobe by many people here, it IS a big deal. But Kobe did worse in 06 when he asked all his teammates not to shake hands with the Suns. Admittedly there was bad blood in that series but still, that was a b*tch move on his part and this is coming from a Laker fan. I think what really riles people up is the fact that Laker fans are quick to deflect ANY blame from Kobe, while the rest of the basketball world has been quick to overlook any shortcomings in LeBron on and off the court.

  • http://slamonline.com Russ Bengtson

    If I may interject a brief non sequitur? For someone who really can’t stand Kanye West, I’ve been listening to “Maybach Music 2″ WAY too much. I don’t know what’s wrong with me. “Fifty-seven, 62, tell me how you wanna move.” RAWSE! OK, sorry. Back to your regularly scheduled programming.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Ryan Jones

    What everybody else said.

  • http://www.slamonline.com wayno

    Um I didn’t “speak” at all I typed it…anyone who refers to an online debate as speaking needs to step away from thier computer for more than 8 minutes a day and meet some real people who aren’t on message boards…Just saying…

  • http://www.slamonline.com Myles Brown

    Like a BAWSE.

  • http://www.shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com Eboy

    wayno, you are right. A billion percent. Sorry to have ’caused you any grief.

  • http://slamonline.com B. Long

    LeBron James would’ve been better off just going into hiding for the next 6 months instead of doing that interview yesterday. And if you don’t think that that wearing that Yankee hat to the interview was LeBron’s way of reminding Cav’s fans that they better not ever be critical of him because he could be gone at any moment, then you don’t know LeBron very well.

  • http://mindyourbusiness@nosybutt.com Allenp

    Man, I think too much is being made of this issue, but I don’t feel sorry for Bron.
    He chose not to shake hands. He knows people watch his every move, he revels in it. He likes being the center of attention, just like most NBA superstars. So, if you like the spotlight you have to accept it when it illuminates and when it burns. That’s life.
    He went out like a punk for not shaking hands. It’s a punk move. If I was on the park, or in the gym, and somebody did that, I’d think they were a sore-losing punk. If I smashed somebody in 2K9 or Live and they got all pissy, I’d think the same.
    If Bron didn’t believe in post game interactions he should have the court when he won as well as when he lost. His excuse that he’s a “winner” is bogus. He’s lost plenty of times before. In fact, he doesn’t have a ring, so ultimately he’s lost every year since he’s been in the league. He should understand what losing is, and he should know how to deal with it by now.
    He deserves to be questioned for acting churlish. He make is own King-sized bed, so now he has to lie in it. Ulimately, the same media that is tearing him down will be praising him even more when he wins a ring. That’s how the game works.

  • http://www.shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com Eboy

    I think B is smart and wise. Can you be both?

  • http://slamonline.com B. Long

    That being said, he is just a kid. 30 is the new 20 so I guess that makes LeBron 14? Now this all makes sense.

  • http://www.slamonline.com wayno

    co-sign Allen. Well said. That’s been my point the whole time, you just articulated it far better than I.

  • AR

    He is not a kid.

  • ABIMATOR

    Fu(k all this sh*t, Magic in 5!!!

  • http://slamonlin.com tina

    YES!!! i’m 20 hahaha

  • http://www.kb24.com The Seed

    What does Kobe have to do with this article, Knowing, shows what are on people mind, Make Kobe look bad to prop Lebron up-Sad. For all these new Lebron fans, alot of people don’t like Lebron, before this walk out, I see him as fake as can be, he says all the right things, try to be this nice cool dude, who Mo loves, but to be honest, one of his teammates should have called him out- To me this is the sad part, they are scared to call out their leader. NAMIK, your dumb, Kobe paid his price from wannabes like you, Kobe messed up in Colordao, but I have messed up in life, you have, Imagine if everyone knew about your life, we probably wouldn’t want to chat with you. This Kobe talk about r@pe is dumb too, the girl stopped the case, took the money and doesn’t even talk to her eye witness bell hop friend old boyfriend anymore. Check it online, Kobe to me is the face of the NBA-and world, I read articles about Lebron getting mad because Kobe was treated like a rockstar. Lebron is arrogant and it showed, more because he had time to talk to his MOM, JAY Z, BUFFET and agents about what to say to media. I don’t understand and someone tell me how a player who admitting feels can’t be stopped, takes camera picutres when up in games in front of other teams, dances on sidelines when winning, hitting fake balls, but when he wins against ATL and DET, wants love from fellow players. Howard said it best when he said PRIDE MAKES A MAN FALL- BYE BYE LEBRON.

  • http://slamonline.com B. Long

    AR:That’s called sarcasm.

  • http://www.shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    This is kind of entertaining.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Ryan Jones

    Here, in order of chronology and (probably) importance, are the three worst things that happened to me last weekend:
    -Everton 1-2 Chelsea
    -My lawnmower broke
    -I came down with the flu (no swin-o)
    I’ve been in bed with that always-fun combination of sweats/chills and body ache for about 48 of the past 62 hours, the suspicious timing of which will please those of you on the “look how right we were!” side of the debate being hosted here. Unfortunately, the Cavs’ Game 6 loss was only the fifth worst thing that happened to me this weekend (No. 4 being we just figured out we’ve been overpaying on our local property taxes; long, expensive story), and almost certainly not the reason I got sick. Regarding which I can only say, I’m sorry to have disappointed you.
    But, since I’m pretty much contractually obliged to speak on this topic, here’s what I’ll say:
    -LeBron wasn’t good enough. Statistically speaking, he wasn’t good enough in roughly the same way that Jerry West wasn’t good enough in the 1969 NBA Finals, when he (West) averaged 38 ppg and claimed Finals MVP honors despite the Lakers (who also had Wilt Chamberlain!!! And Elgin Baylor!!!!!) losing the series. But still, not good enough is not good enough, and that’s exactly what LeBron was.
    -LeBron should’ve stayed around to congratulate the Magic, and he should’ve spoken to the media. He didn’t, and so some amount of public wrist-slapping is deserved. I could try to defend/justify his failure here by imagining what was going through his mind at the final buzzer — “I’m better than every guy on that team, but because they have a bunch of 6-9 shooters who hit an absurd 50 percent from three the whole series, they’re moving on and I’m not; f*ck this” — but that would make me the sort of empathetic judge who screws up a perfectly good supreme court. It also wouldn’t change the fact that he should’ve congratulated the Magic, and he didn’t. So, fail LeBron.
    -I could also argue that many of the folks on the “You stay classy, LeBron” tip (sorry my phone was off, Myles; really hated to miss that text when it came through) seem a little silly hammering any shortcomings in LeBron’s character when Your Favorite Player™ is famously and repeatedly guilty of much, much worse, but again, that wouldn’t change the fact that LeBron should’ve manned up after the game, and he should expect to be publicly chastised for failing in that regard.
    -As more people seem to be realizing by the hour, hating LeBron is fun, free and easy; I often think that if I hadn’t had the access to him that I have, perhaps I would hate him too. Just my luck that I had to meet him and spend a bunch of time around him, I guess. My judgment must be atrocious.
    Anyway, those of you who choose to, take joy in his team’s loss (enjoying another team’s failure is at least as fun as reveling in “your” team’s success, a fact of sports fandom I’m with which I’m well acquainted), and let the Cavs’ failure reflect on him however you like. But anyone who looks past the actual oncourt realities of this series — Orlando’s matchup advantages and their almost literally unbelievable three-point shooting and the Cavs’ obvious deficiencies and LeBron’s historically mind-blowing excellence — and sees it as anything other than what it was is too basketball-stupid for me to take seriously.
    You can, as The Logo made clear 40 years ago, be f*cking ridiculously good and not good enough at the same time.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Myles Brown

    I missed you Sports Gal.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Ryan Jones

    Now I’m gonna go make up for almost two days of missed work at my job (stupid job), so I will not be available for further interplay on this one. If you want to take that as refusing to shake hands with the winners, why, that’s up to you.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Alan Paul

    Isiah and Pistons still have not lived that down down 20 years later. LBJ making a big mistake with his handling of this situation.

  • http://www.shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com Eboy

    Wow, Alan Paul!!!! Damn…..this Lebron thing brings out the best. Good to see your name Alan. BTW, unless someone else wants to seem silly and argue this…..Isiah and the Pistons as A WHOLE were universally hated by NBA fans at that point of their team history. That’s not even debatable as their only support was from their diehard fans. Lebron is the complete opposite, universally loved and commited a mistep that won’t haunt him for his career, but will be a needle that will bug him until he addresses it at a later time. The small percantage of fans/press/etc. that dislike him won’t break Lebron’s abiltiy to be the most marketable guy in the league because of this. It won’t.

  • http://www.shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com Eboy

    *percentage/ability

  • Tavoris

    I read through all-well most-well, some-of the responses, and it boils down to this: Lebron broke Sportsmanship Rule 101-be humble in victory and gracious in defeat. There’s no way 2 justify doing otherwise, especially when you are the one getting all the glory for your teams success. This half-assed explanation of why he didn’t exhibit sportsmanship won’t hurt his image, but it still was no good.

  • http://lastknickstanding.blogspot.com Bryan

    Co sign eboy.

  • Tavoris

    Jukai, Robert Parish got busted with a heluva lot more weed than Melo did…and let’s not get on Bill Walton’s decades of drug abuse. Don’t use the easy targets to prove your point.

  • http://slamonline.com B. Long

    Ummm, I’m not sure if James Posey’s facebook page is real or not, but it seems to be hinting in his updates that he maybe heading to Cleveland. Interesting.

  • http://www.shawn-kemps-offspring.blogspot.com/ TADOne

    The Pistons enjoyed being universally hated.

  • http://sdklf.com Jukai

    Tavoris: Okay, Tavoris, let’s replace Carmello with Bill Walton and Robert Parish. Did their drug busts get anywhere near the amount of attention that Lebron is getting now?
    Actually, I’m really asking, because I don’t remember that crap. But my point remains.

  • http://www.slamonline.com wayno

    As a Pistons fan during that era, I throughly enjoyed everyone else hating the Pistons…it made them winning that much sweeter. I can only imagine how much that feeling was amplified in the players on that team.

  • Tavoris

    actually, Robert Parish’s DID get a lot of attention (he tried to have 2 ounces of weed Fedex’ed to him). And everybody and their momma knows that Walton’s habits shortened his career as much as his injuries did. Lebron is getting a lot of heat right now, but trust that it will all be forgotten by Thurs…

  • http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/.a/6a00d83451c3cb69e201156fbef83c970c-pi ENDS

    I Love My Magic just wanted to point that out. it was said that if the Double O won it would create this chaotic disorder…

  • Eazy Yi

    This small thing really warranted an article?
    Yawn, the guy wants to win you’re asking why he didn’t go and hug the guys he just lost to? Why he didn’t want to talk to the media who are going to ask him the same questions for two months regardless of one they do it? And his team mates? who didn’t step up continually? I think LeBron is the best player in the NBA and still, even after “this” the best team mate in the NBA

  • http://fjsdklf.com Jukai

    Tavoris: C’mon dude… I’m sure Walton constantly seeing unicorns on the court was a hindrance to his career, but I’m pretty sure it was his knees/ankles/back that did him in, and ONLY his knees/ankles/back.

  • http://fjsdklf.com Jukai

    And that’s just it! This WILL be forgotten by Thursday! So why is it such a big deal to crucify him now!

  • Diogo

    Heavy indeed. People give him sh*t for the most unimportant things.

  • Adam Sweeney

    Perception is reality and at the moment many people believe LeBron James acted in a selfish manner. I am a LeBron fan but he is not above criticism for mistakes. It comes with being a superstar athlete. Nobody should be above examination or having respect for their opponent, for that matter. Nobody is asking him to hug his opponents. A simple “good game” will do. It’s really not that hard to do. Whether or not you believe his behavior was a big deal, it’s impossible to deny that he displayed poor sportsmanship, something the “best team player and student of the game” should not do.

  • Adam Sweeney

    Jukai, I hope you know that I have yet to talk to anyone on the SLAM staff is happy that LeBron is out of the Playoffs. I know I’m disappointed. And the letdown has nothing to do with the fact he is on the cover of our magazine. I love LeBron’s game. Having said that, it is our job to examine both the good and bad decisions of players. Anyone making comments, not saying that you are personally, that say, “Well it could be worse. He could be a felon,” is missing the point. Mistakes aren’t relative. I don’t say, ‘Well Dwight Howard elbowed a guy but it’s ok. He could have jumped in the stands like Ron Ron!” You measure each incident individually. In this case LeBron messed up. It stands alone.

  • http://www.manutd.com/ Z

    Myles, Russ, Alan Paul and whomever. Nobody is saying that LeBron didn’t mess up. He did. That’s done been acknowledge. What we (or at lease I) are saying is that nobody will care by Thursday. Here’s a list of what superstars have done in the recent years: punch opponents, publicly demand to be traded, publicly demand for teammates to be traded, drive under the influence, get caught with weed, cheat on their wives/gfs, get accused of sexual abuse, diss opponents through the media, refuse to come out of a game, refuse to come off the bench, miss practise. as far as i know, bron hasn’t done any of those things. as far as i know, his teammates love him. as far as i know, his rep around the league is flawless (except with deshawn). so yeah, he should have shook hands with dwight but are you freaking kidding me?! part of his legacy? failure to deal with tough situations?

  • http://www.nba.com tealish

    I actually read through all the comments just to see where some of our regular commentators and SLAM writers stand, and I’ve got to say for the most part, I’m impressed with the honesty. Taking LeBron James to task was definitely warranted and I’m somewhat surprised at how much run this story is getting — not because the issue itself is undeserving of it, but because it’d be so much easier not to and be that “loyal mag” that Bron will recognize when he does rise back towards his throne on high.

  • http://www.manutd.com/ Z

    Adam, I don’t think anyone at SLAM is really pleased that LeBron is out of the playoffs… except Myles. He may try to hide behind a certain objectivity that’s not there or claim that he’s just trying to rectify the slurping that Bron gets but, to quote Jay, ‘we don’t believe you, you need more people’. Here’s what he wrote after Bron went for 44-12 and 7 in 49 mins and lost in OT :
    ”2.Speaking of Shard. Clutch. LeBron….eh, not so much. Yes, there were amazing drives/dunks, clutch FT and long range threes that willed their way in. But there were also numerous thoughtless turnovers, airballs, and completely mismanaged possessions. And please dont say he was tired. Cause youre probably one of the same folks that was talking that “Fo, Fo, Fo” Sh*t a week ago. The Cavs have played the least games of any team left in the playoffs and Shard has played 200 more minutes that the Kang. No excuses. If hes amazing one minute, he cant be that tired the next. 3.He fell over. That was Bullsh*t. Capital B. 4.Hes 6′8, 270 or some sh*t like that. For the millionth time, get a post game. 5.When he starts throwing teammates under the bus, lets just hope one of them uses one of those fancy cameras he got them. 6.If a certain someone was one second away from being swept after winning 66 games, being named MVP, and being proclaimed the favorite to win the series by ‘experts’ despite the fact that his team lost 3 of 4 during the regular season to that same opponent and proceeded to turn the ball over 7 times in the fourth quarter and overtime, shoot airballs and keep looking for the refs to bail him out in the biggest must-win game of his life…Hed NEVER EVER EVER hear the end of it. Ever.”
    His biggest argument is usually that Kobe would catch heat for such and such so he MUST balance things out. Meh. For me, he has lost any credibility in discussing Bron-related things.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Myles Brown

    I still wonder what they did with those cameras…

  • http://www.manutd.com/ Z

    They’re there, waiting to catch it on film when (not even if) he’ll throw his teammates under the bus. I know you’ll be watching.

  • http://www.manutd.com/ Z

    I actually think they bought the same camera that filmed someone in a parking lot throwing someone else of his own team under a proverbial bus. They got it 4 cheap.

  • http://www.mybleedingfingertips.blogspot.com/ Myles Brown

    I love a good sale.

  • http://sdklf.com Jukai

    Adam, I believe Lebron deserved to take a hit for how he presented himself. I’m surprised you said a handshake will tarnish his legacy and devoted it to an entire post, while someone else buying weed or throwing his teammates under the bus or driving under the influence winds up in the “other news” section.

  • http://www.manutd.com/ Z

    In all honesty, you have every right to not slurp Bron. He can make do without a fan or two. It’s just that everytime you try to pass up your criticism of him or his game as objective or constructive… I can not help but laugh. And for that, I thank you. I look forward to any article on Bron on this site (good or bad) partly because I know you’ll be there to ‘not let Bron get a free pass’. It’s entertaining and it gives me a chance to chance to poke holes in your rationale. Thank you, Mr. Brown.

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